When starting on a new project it’s important to begin with a good solid foundation that you’re comfortable with. You can start working so much faster when you have a ready to use enviroment with a good file/folder structure and Grunt-tasks to go. This is why I like having my own personal boilerplate that I use for almost all projects I work on.

With the release of iOS 7.1, Apple added a new viewport meta tag to Safari. The minimal-ui meta tag lets us minimize the top and bottom bar in the browser interface which gives us more screen real estate and creates a much more cleaner look.

If you’ve ever worked with Sass or Less, chances are you’ve used CodeKit. An application that helps you speed up your workflow with automatic file compilation, browser-auto-refresh and built in syntax control among many other features. After having worked as a freelance web developer, Bryan Jones decided to purse a career in business administration in North […]

At their core, Sass mixins are blocks of code that you define once and can then re-use anywhere, if you are familiar with any programming language you can think of them as functions. In this post I’ll go over the 8 Sass mixins I think every developer should have in their toolbox.

Calc() is a native CSS function that allows you to use mathematical expressions with addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. In this post I’ll show you how you can use this to create a basic grid.

Recently I found out a way to with jQuery dynamically change the background of an element with depending on the colors behind it. And I thought it would be neat to do the same but with text color and with SASS. This can be really useful if you are using an OOCSS/modular approach on your project.

The specifications for Media Queries and Selectors have recently been updated with some new goodie goodness. These specifications are only in the Editor’s Draft stage, which means they haven’t been officially published yet (more on that can be found here). But they give a hint on what may come with CSS level 4.

How does a new CSS property get standardised? Who makes the decisions? Why should I care about the standardisation process? What’s the deal with airline food? I’ll be covering that, and some more in this post.

Grunt is a way to automate many of the tasks you’re doing when you develop. Are you still minifying, compiling, concatenating, compressing, prefixing all your code manually? Nonsense poopy pants! In this tutorial I will show you how Grunt will do all this for you, and then some!

So you got your fancy responsive site up. It looks great on your iPad, iPhone, Galaxy Note, Xperia Go, refrigerator and Tamagotchi. But have you given a thought on it’s mobile performance? In this post I’ll go over 4 simple steps to make your site more mobile friendly.

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